Great site and request
at www.bumpshack.com/katrina.htm
I would love if you would link to it off your page as well.
Thanks for your time.
I am slowly hearing from my loved ones in the area
joshua holmes
A Public Gallery of Thoughts, Images and Sounds in Response to Hurricane Katrina
posted by Anonymous at 11:20 PM
No attachments, please
International Blogging for Disaster Relief Day
Katrina Missing/Found Persons Digest
Donate to Relief Efforts - Networkforgood.org
Yahoo!/Red Cross donation site
Andy Carvin's Waste of Bandwidth
(t=technorati, d=del.icio.us, f=flickr)
Eudaemonius posted a photo:
alexmaddison81 posted a photo:
1/72 Hurricane IIc 1 Sqn BD935 ‘JX-P’
jessiev posted a photo:
Welcome to Wilson, NC
www.wanderingeducators.com/best/traveling/welcome-wilson-nc
moacirdsp posted a photo:
Dartmouth
Bristol County
Massachusetts
USA 1991
Greenville, NC posted a photo:
The City of Greenville hosted the inaugural Hurri Up hurricane preparedness event for city and county GIS professionals from across eastern North Carolina today in an effort to provide a way for local government organizations to share geographic information system (GIS) best practices, strategies, insights, and assistance during severe weather-related events such as hurricanes and tornados. GIS technology plays a critical role in emergency management before, during, and after severe weather events. August 28, 2019.
Photo by Aaron Hines / City of Greenville
The National Guard posted a photo:
Members of the West Virginia National Guard conduct flood recovery missions near Tridelphia, West Virginia, June 17, 2025. West Virginia Governor Patrick Morrisey declared a state of emergency for Ohio County, West Virginia, after a deadly flash flooding event caused massive damages within the county. Soldiers of the 115th Engineer Vertical Construction Company, 119th Engineer Company (SAPPER), 601st Engineer Support Company, and 863rd Military Police Company are assisting local emergency management, first responder and public works personnel in conducting debris and traffic management duties along with public liaison missions. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Edwin L. Wriston)
Tom_bal posted a photo:
Hawker Hurricane Mk1 R4118
605 (County of Warwick) Squadron at Drem on 17 August 1940. During the Battle of Britain it flew 49 sorties from Croydon and shot down five enemy aircraft.
After being battle damaged on 22 October 1940, the aircraft was rebuilt and taken on charge by 111 Squadron at Dyce on 18 January 1941. There it was flown on patrol over the North Sea and was again in combat. Over the following two years it was used primarily as a training aircraft with 59 and 56 OTUs, and was rebuilt a further three times following major accidents, including hitting a lorry on the runway and being stuffed into a snowbank!
In December 1943, R4118 was crated at Cardiff and shipped to India as a training aircraft. However it was never needed and remained in its packing case in Bombay until 1947 when it was struck off charge and donated to a university for engineering instruction. The fuselage was stood outside in a compound with the propeller, wings and tailplane laid on the ground. There it remained, exposed to the elements and ignored by the world, until 1996, when retired businessman and restoration enthusiast Peter Vacher began his remarkable quest to bring R4118 home.
seen at the 2013 Abingdon Air & Country Show.
Taken with a Nikon D90
Greenville, NC posted a photo:
After receiving 5–9 inches of rain over night, many low-lying areas of Greenville saw flash flooding, including Green Mill Run at Elm Street Park. (June 16, 2025).
Photo by Aaron Hines / City of Greenville
Euan Leitch posted a photo:
Euan Leitch posted a photo:
Euan Leitch posted a photo:
Black Diamond Images posted a photo:
Copyright - All Rights Reserved - Black Diamond Images
Black Diamond Images posted a photo:
Copyright - All Rights Reserved - Black Diamond Images
MilanWH posted a photo:
@HAV Year Event Rijssen 2024
Infrogmation posted a photo:
Magazine Street, Uptown New Orleans. This part of town had hurricane wind damaged, but escaped the Federal Flood that deluged the majority of the city.
NickD58 posted a photo:
A stormy Talisker Bay on Skye. The day was as grey as this looks with the exception of this buoy and what at first I thought was a bollard but is actually a gauntlet. Still, it looked wild and beautiful and Talisker waterfall was in full flow also.
NickD58 posted a photo:
It doesn't really look too stormy here but the wind was blowing and the rain was falling. The water coming down the waterfall was occasionally pushed upwards when a very strong gust of wind would hit the cliffs.
NickD58 posted a photo:
Talisker, Isle of Skye, Scotland.
scotways.com/
West Freeman Photography posted a photo:
This shipping container was placed in the South Louisiana Marsh by a horrible storm named Katrina
#Weather #HurricaneKatrina #Hurricane #ShippingContainer #Louisiana #LouisianaWeather #Clouds
ncmec posted a photo:
In August 2005, Hurricane Katrina became one of the most destructive storms to ever hit the U.S. In response, NCMEC handled 34,045 calls and helped resolve 5,192 missing child cases.
A major force behind those resolutions were the members of NCMEC’s Team Adam, a group of retired law enforcement volunteers who are deployed in cases of critically missing children. Due to NCMEC’s efforts in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, Congress mandated the establishment of the National Emergency Child Locator Center (NECLC), which NCMEC now operates during Presidentially declared disasters at the request of FEMA. Bob Bird/NCMEC
ncmec posted a photo:
In August 2005, Hurricane Katrina became one of the most destructive storms to ever hit the U.S. In response, NCMEC handled 34,045 calls and helped resolve 5,192 missing child cases.
A major force behind those resolutions were the members of NCMEC’s Team Adam, a group of retired law enforcement volunteers who are deployed in cases of critically missing children. Due to NCMEC’s efforts in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, Congress mandated the establishment of the National Emergency Child Locator Center (NECLC), which NCMEC now operates during Presidentially declared disasters at the request of FEMA. Bob Bird/NCMEC
ncmec posted a photo:
In August 2005, Hurricane Katrina became one of the most destructive storms to ever hit the U.S. In response, NCMEC handled 34,045 calls and helped resolve 5,192 missing child cases.
A major force behind those resolutions were the members of NCMEC’s Team Adam, a group of retired law enforcement volunteers who are deployed in cases of critically missing children. Due to NCMEC’s efforts in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, Congress mandated the establishment of the National Emergency Child Locator Center (NECLC), which NCMEC now operates during Presidentially declared disasters at the request of FEMA. Bob Bird/NCMEC
ncmec posted a photo:
In August 2005, Hurricane Katrina became one of the most destructive storms to ever hit the U.S. In response, NCMEC handled 34,045 calls and helped resolve 5,192 missing child cases.
A major force behind those resolutions were the members of NCMEC’s Team Adam, a group of retired law enforcement volunteers who are deployed in cases of critically missing children. Due to NCMEC’s efforts in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, Congress mandated the establishment of the National Emergency Child Locator Center (NECLC), which NCMEC now operates during Presidentially declared disasters at the request of FEMA. Bob Bird/NCMEC
ncmec posted a photo:
In August 2005, Hurricane Katrina became one of the most destructive storms to ever hit the U.S. In response, NCMEC handled 34,045 calls and helped resolve 5,192 missing child cases.
A major force behind those resolutions were the members of NCMEC’s Team Adam, a group of retired law enforcement volunteers who are deployed in cases of critically missing children. Due to NCMEC’s efforts in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, Congress mandated the establishment of the National Emergency Child Locator Center (NECLC), which NCMEC now operates during Presidentially declared disasters at the request of FEMA. Bob Bird/NCMEC
ncmec posted a photo:
In August 2005, Hurricane Katrina became one of the most destructive storms to ever hit the U.S. In response, NCMEC handled 34,045 calls and helped resolve 5,192 missing child cases.
A major force behind those resolutions were the members of NCMEC’s Team Adam, a group of retired law enforcement volunteers who are deployed in cases of critically missing children. Due to NCMEC’s efforts in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, Congress mandated the establishment of the National Emergency Child Locator Center (NECLC), which NCMEC now operates during Presidentially declared disasters at the request of FEMA. Bob Bird/NCMEC
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